2017 Southern California Desert in Bloom

Friday

Apr 28, 2017 at 12:01 AM

Dawny G

This is a desert.Monument Valley in southeastern Utah.

And this is a desert. Anza-Borrego of California from www.desertusa.com/anza_borrego/du-abpmain.htmlAnd this is also the Anza-Borrego Desert---in bloom:Anza Borrego Desert, Southern California Photos courtesy of Joy L. DelmanSo what happened?????

A desert typically gets +/- ten inches of precipitation a year. Might not be hot but it's definitely dry.

From 2014 to late 2016, California suffered drought conditions that reduced water for farms and communities and increased risks of wildfires.

From late 2016 through the winter of 2017, Southern California got as much as double the typical desert rainfall. I heard from friends and news reports of torrential rains that could wash out bridges and threaten communities.

Nature has its ways, and anyone who's read any of my blog knows I'm often overwhelmed by natural phenomena, whether it's looking at mountains, rivers, volcanoes, or learning about the rains bringing an end to a four-year drought.

But what a spectacular end! The California deserts responded to the rains with floral explosions of light and color.

I could do a lot of writing here. But I think I these beautiful desert photos speak for themselves, (Please note: I tried to find the names of some of the flowers. I was not very successful. If you know any of them, please comment or let me know and I'll update my information.)

purpurascens and goldfield

Purple Mat

And when the desert is in bloom, the caterpillars arrive. This caterpillar is not a farmer's friend...but with plenty to eat in the desert, local gardeners may be spared from predatory ways. And as with all natural cycles, the moths serve several useful purposes: food for migrating hawks who fly over 10,000 miles from South America to the North American Arctic (they get hungry--they need to eat!) ; the satiated plant-filled caterpillars who escape the hawks burrow into the ground to return next winter as moths that will pollinate native plants as they sip their nectar. And the cycle begins again.Sphinx Moth caterpillarFor more photos of the Anza Borrego Desert in bloom, visit Anza Borrego Desert in BloomFor more information on the sphinx moths, visit http://theabf.org/sphinx-moths For more information on the desert in bloom, visit http://www.desertusa.com/wildflo/wildupdates.html

Special thanks to Joy Delman for providing such rare and beautiful views of the desert in bloom